This has certainly been a hot button issue for yours truly on this site.
I've read so many posters - whom I know to be very good golfers - share thoughts on how hh'ers play the game. The general consensus would appear to be simply summarized as "Play the right tees", which I couldn't disagree with more.
What a very wise poster said last week (or maybe the week before, in the PV vs. Shinney thread) about Tom Paul rings true, so true I'll actually dig it up and quote him:
I can validate both of Tom's points there...1) he was extremely short relative to his peer great amateur players...2) and on the other side, he was too damn good from there on into the hole to have even the slightest clue what a 15 handicapper must be thinking when they are trying to get onto the 8th green at Pine Valley...
Also, by the same poster from another thread:
I say this with the caveat that, players can only really judge a golf course through their own play. I don't care if I've played 50 rounds with a 15 handicapper, I cannot tell you how he feels when he's standing on the tee trying to figure out the best way to make a par or bogey...
Waaaaaaaaay too often (to use a different poster's style
![Smiley :)](http://golfclubatlas.com/forum/Smileys/classic/smiley.gif)
), folks seem to think the only real difference between ace golfers and those of us who struggle is length off the tee. Well, I'm here to tell you that's way down on the list of differences.
The biggest single difference, imho, is quality of misses, and I believe this is also the biggest area of misunderstanding of hh'ers.
So if the guy I quoted above feels he can't judge how a hh'er plays, why does anyone else?
Put another way, do you really remember how you played the game when you were starting out, or is your memory perhaps colored? My money's on the latter.
What are the implications for architecture?
How should one accomodate the hh'er?
Can you do this while still probably sufficient challenge for the better golfer?
Should any architect even care about the hh'er? (I mean this seriously - I'm starting to wonder if maybe architects should just ignore those of us who don't have the ability to play at least moderately capably. Maybe there really isn't room for the casual golfer on "better" courses. Or maybe there is?)
Does this playability have implications for the better golfer as well?
Well, that's a lot of babble to digest for now - I'll share more later, if anyone cares to hear it.
![Smiley :)](http://golfclubatlas.com/forum/Smileys/classic/smiley.gif)